Aerospace, Vol. 10, Pages 300: Functional Hazard Assessment of a Modular Re-Configurable Morphing Wing Using Taguchi and Finite Element Methodologies

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Aerospace, Vol. 10, Pages 300: Functional Hazard Assessment of a Modular Re-Configurable Morphing Wing Using Taguchi and Finite Element Methodologies

Aerospace doi: 10.3390/aerospace10030300

Authors: Faisal Mahmood Seyed M. Hashemi Hekmat Alighanbari

Growing concerns over the CO2 footprint due the exponential demand of the aviation industry, along with the requirements for high aerodynamic performance, cost saving, and manoeuvrability during different phases of a flight, pave the path towards adaptable wing design. Morphing wing design encompasses most, if not all, of the flight condition variations, and can respond interactively. However, functional failure of the morphing wing might bring devastating impacts on the passengers, crew, and/or aircraft. In the present work, the dynamic characteristics of a re-configurable modular morphing wing developed in-house by a research group at the Toronto Metropolitan University, are investigated from the perspective of a functional hazard assessment (FHA). This modular morphing wing, developed based on the idea of a parallel robot, consists of a number of structural elements connected to each other and to the wing ribs through eye-bolt joints. Timoshenko’s bending beam theory, in conjunction with the finite element method (FEM), is exploited to model the structural members. Possible hazards, assumed here to be the structural failure of the beam components, have been identified and their failure conditions are assessed. Numerical simulations have been presented to show the impact of various combinations of the identified hazards on the vibration signature of the morphing wing in unmorphed and morphed configurations. Identification of changes in the wing’s vibration signature is a vital component in the fail-safe structural and aeroelastic design of an aircraft. The present study is geared towards the structural response of the system in the absence of any aerodynamic loads.

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